River erosion is impacting the road and requiring the replacement of health infrastructure.
After significant rain and high water from the Kobuk River the Native Village of Kobuk is now flooded.
After he lost the trail, Jeff King stopped his dog team and draped his sleeping bag over his head to block the battering wind and blowing snow. He was somewhere between the villages of Ambler and Shungnak in the Kobuk 440 Sled Dog Race. Conditions ranged from howling to furious. King lay down with his team. He cuddled a dog named Twister and tried to sleep. That’s when a flaw in the plan rattled his bones. The work of getting there had caused him to sweat, dampness worsened by blowing snow that found its way inside his clothing.
The Arctic Sounder - Serving the Northwest Arctic and the North Slope
High water in the Koyukuk River is causing erosion near Huslia as warm spring temperatures rapidly melt above-average snowpack.
The Baldwin Peninsula near Kotzebue has seen a massive increase in beavers over the last two decades, according to new research from the University of Alaska Fairbanks.
Dead chum salmon are lining the banks of one of the Yukon River’s largest tributaries. Koyukuk River residents and scientists alike suspect the deaths are
The sweeping list of potential health implications includes the introduction of new diseases, an increase in accidents and a worsening allergy season.
The statewide average temperature in December was 19.4 degrees, 15.7 degrees above the 20th century average.
A tundra fire has burned nearly 2,000 acres on the Selawik National Wildlife Refuge over the past week.
A wildfire is burning in a remote area of northwest Alaska. The Alaska Fire Service reports that the Zane Hills Fire was discovered this week, and mapped at 1,900 acres.
River Erosion
5-30-13 Flooding Kobuk River - Kobuk, Alaska, USA
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